Exhibition being held

“Be Ambitious - Matsuura Takeshiro and a Genealogy of Thinkers in the Meiji Period”

Period: October 6th, 2018 ～ June 14th, 2019

Greeting

The year 2018 marks a milestone for 19th-century explorer and author Takeshiro Matsuura, falling on the 200th anniversary of his birth and the 130th anniversary of his death. He was active from the closing days of the Tokugawa shogunate to the Meiji era (1868-1912) and is also known as a godparent of Hokkaido. His great accomplishments cover such a broad range of fields that they cannot be expressed in a word or two. Takeshiro spent more than eight years to build a study room, dubbed “Ichijo-jiki” or a room just the size of “ichi jo” or one tatami mat, based on time-honored pieces of wood collected through the good offices of people he got acquainted with during his journey. Within the one-mat room of minuscule space extends a microcosm where the thoughts of Takeshiro, who greeted his celebratory age of 70 then, and of his friends appeared to be amassed. Why was it the size of one mat? To find answers to this and other questions, please visit the “Ichijo-jiki left in ICU” exhibition being held in the Hachiro Yuasa Memorial Museum simultaneously with this exhibition. At the special exhibition of the ICU Archives, we will trace the track record of Christian intellectuals who led to the opening of the ICU, beginning with Takeshiro in connection with the reason why “Ichijo-jiki” is in this school, a Christian university established after the end of World War II.

In the Meiji era, Christian groups which constituted mainstream Protestant missionary work in Japan were called the Yokohama Band, Kumamoto Band and Sapporo Band according to the names of relevant places. In particular, botanist Kingo Miyabe, known as a leading figure of the Sapporo Band, had close ties with Takeshiro. Miyabe sought to study botany under the influence of Takeshiro. Kanzo Uchimura, who was among the second group of students enrolled at Sapporo Agricultural College as was Miyabe, played a leading role in the Sapporo Band to become a figure never to be forgotten in tracing the history of Christians in Japan.

The special exhibition takes up a wide range of exchanges among Christian intellectuals in the Sapporo and Kumamoto bands, overlapping Takeshiro’s great achievements over the pioneering spirit as seen from that. By assuming the ICU as something down the stream of history of what has been taken over from such a human network, we hope to offer an opportunity for considering the pioneering spirit that underlies this university.

In the Meiji era, some people loudly called for “frontier development” in a condescending, pushy manner seeking to develop something obscure. Against that background, Takeshiro advised the government to pay close attention to the native people of “Ezochi,” as Hokkaido was called then. Such a humble attitude as his provides us with a good opportunity to consider “what a true pioneer is” and “what the ICU’s pioneer spirit is” when we live in an increasingly globalizing contemporary world.

Permanent Exhibition

Photographs（a part of collections）

Database

About ICU Archives and Special Collections

There are over 10,000 items that can be viewed, the majority of which come from materials collected for the university’s 50-year history. Please contact the ICU Archives & Special Collections, if you wish to view the original or to ask any other questions. When viewing the archives please be sure to conform to the established procedures.

Collection Items

Administrative document (appx. 6,500 items)

Photographs (appx. 3,200 items)

University publications (appx. 600)

Handwritten documents (appx. 200 items)

Mission Statement

The archives are to continuously collect, organize, conserve, and make public documents related to ICU’s history. Moreover, the archives will collect and conserve rare books and manuscripts, special collections and other documents that accord with the founding principles of the university in order to pass these on to future generations, and by so doing it shall fulfill its mission to support education and research.

Information

Open Hours

Mon.-Fri. : 9:00～16:00 (Lunch Time 12:00-13:00)

Sat./Sun. : closed

Location

ICU main Library 1F

About Entering

Anyone can enter

Member of ICU : Feel free to enter

Outsiders : Before entering, please visit counter at the Document Supply Center on the first floor of Main Library.